Took at the list, its much as i thought it would be from a birdcage liner like Autosport. Way too heavily slanted toward contemporary stars (the past twenty years or so). I can think of a great many stars of the sixties, seventies, and eighties that should be on this list. Of the contemporary Indycar stars, Franchitti yes, but certanly wouldn't rate him higher than Mears, Foyt or Jones. Gary Paffett at 8? Really? Will Power, Jorg Muller, and Nicolas Minassian? Hell he couldn't even cut it in the IRL What the hell are they doing on this list? Al Unser Jr? Joking right? I'd put his father and uncle on the list, but not that coked-up, wife beating hillbilly....
I liked Stephen South enormously during his F3 and F2 days, but he raced in F1, granted he failed to qualify his McLaren at Long Beach, but he had a F1 drive.
Greg Moore and Gerry Birrell are good calls, but I would have rated Moore much higher than Wheldon. Dan obviously was good on ovals, but struggled badly on road courses, its one of the reasons he couldn't find steady work in Indycar his last few years. Wouldn't have placed hin nearly that high.
Just curious, where's Al Holbert, or Hurly Haywood?
I love Rossi, as well the rally guys, but they don't belong on the list. Like I said, typical tabloid crap from Autosport.
I put Rick Mears at the top of the list, the most dominating driver of his generation, in a loaded with talent CART era. Tested for Brabham twice, and was quicker than Nelson Piquet at the height of his powers as a F1 driver. Bernie was desperate to sign him, and tried like hell, but Rick liked driving for Penske, and didn't want to have to uproot his young family to Europe.
Fax